USA TODAY US Edition

Giuliani says Trump has nothing to fear from Cohen

- Gregory Korte

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s lawyer in the investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election said the president has no reason to fear cooperatio­n between Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen and federal prosecutor­s.

“If he wants to cooperate, I think it’s great,” Rudy Giuliani said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “It’s going to lead to nothing.”

In an interview that aired last week, Cohen said he did not share Trump’s animosity toward Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller. Cohen told ABC he did not dismiss the possibilit­y of cooperatin­g with the Russia investigat­ion.

For years, Cohen was one of Trump’s closest aides who ran interferen­ce for his boss on a wide range of personal and legal matters, earning the reputation as a loyal “fixer.”

Mueller is investigat­ing whether Trump or anyone on his campaign cooperated with Russia in its efforts to influence the presidenti­al campaign. Trump denied any collusion and called Mueller’s inquiry a “witch hunt.”

Separately, federal prosecutor­s are investigat­ing Cohen’s business dealings, including a $130,000 payment made to adult film actress Stormy Daniels in exchange for her silence about her claim of a sexual relationsh­ip with Trump. Although Trump denied the relationsh­ip, the payment was authorized on the eve of the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Federal prosecutor­s in New York took possession last week of 1.3 million documents the FBI seized in a raid on Cohen’s offices in April.

Giuliani told ABC’s “This Week” that Trump “did not originally know” about the $130,000 payment to Daniels, but it was “probably a little foggy as to exactly when the president found out” and reimbursed his former lawyer. Trump has given contradict­ory accounts of the timeline.

The timing and structure of the payment could have an impact on whether it should be considered a campaign contributi­on or an improper advance of settlement funds.

Giuliani was asked what Trump might have known about a meeting in July 2016 at Trump Tower between campaign officials – including son Donald Trump Jr. and son-in-law Jared Kushner – and Russians who claimed to have compromisi­ng informatio­n on Hillary Clinton.

“I think that you could have very, very different recollecti­ons on that because it was right in the heat of the campaign,” he said. “You know what a campaign is like, it’s complete helter skelter.”

Giuliani told NBC News that he recommende­d that Trump not agree to an interview with Mueller. Giuliani called Mueller’s inquiry “a witch hunt and an attempt to trap him in perjury.”

“President Trump wants to testify. We have to hold him back,” he said.

“If he wants to cooperate, I think it’s great. ... It’s going to lead to nothing.”

Rudy Giuliani Lawyer for President Trump

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